French ad for cod liver oil |
amorphous waver-
ing rocks—three fathom
the vitreous
body through which—
small scudding fish deep
down—and
now a lulling lift
and fall—
the vitreous
body through which—
small scudding fish deep
down—and
now a lulling lift
and fall—
red stars—a severed cod-
head between twogreen stones—lifting
From, 'A Cod Head'
William Carlos Williams, 1934
Commercial Extinction
Belonging
to the family, gadidae and to the genus, Gadus, the codfish has shaped the
course of history. In fact, Gadus morhua, the
Atlantic cod, was so popular, and the revenues from its sale so
enticing that over fishing finally drove several cod stocks to collapse. In the early
1990’s, in many areas of the world, the Atlantic cod was pronounced commercially extinct.
When
a species or population can no longer be fished profitably, it is said to be
commercially extinct. Commercial
extinction is preceded by population depletion, usually caused by overfishing. After
fifteen years of moratorium on cod fishing, populations are showing signs of
recovery, but it could be yet another five years until the Marine Stewardship
Council (MSC) can safely certify that
fishing cod will not affect its ability to sustain population levels and
therefore avoid yet another collapse. Added to that, scientists expect that rising ocean temperatures will have a detrimental effect on breeding.
Good
Vibrations: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-963CTDLy68
Good
Reads:
Cod by Mark Kurlansky
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